snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
I've been thinking, it's pretty clear different months are for different genres/specific plot elements, aren't they? This is what I associate the different months with, curious to know whether we match or you have different associations. To be honest, I don't follow this to a t, actually, I stray away from it a lot, but if someone asked me to give them associations off the top of my head, this is what I would come up with.
January: Thrillers, especially ya thrillers, I don't have an explanation but the fact that When we were monsters by Jennifer Niven is set in January and that is the first thriller I ever read.
February: Books that make you cry. Angst season. Maybe with a bit of found family for comfort. Or classics. The two things actually don't have to cancel each other out. If you can recommend me a classic with sibling angst for February 2027 I will be very very grateful.
March: Something with a side of romance. Also, possibly comedic books. Especially comedic fantasy/romantacy.
April: Post-apocalyptic setting.
May: Coming of age stories. Also, does light academia exist as a novel setting as well as dark academia? Because in that case I feel it would fit May very well and I'd be definitely down to read something like that.
June: Obviously, books with LGBT+ characters. Any genre.
July/August: Can't decide which one is for high fantasy and which one is for summerween. On one end, July is a bit creepy, on the other August is closer to Halloween, so it feels more in tone with it.
September: Dark academia, back to school is hard enough, let's at least romanticise it a bit.
October: Horror, no explanations needed.
November: Short philosophy/philosophical books.
December: Anything Christmas themed obviously, romance, horror, fantasy. Doesn't matter. The Christmas theme is the constant.
Post from the Nine-Tenths forum
This says a lot, but I don't think I've ever encountered a character as constantly horny as Colin before. Man just never stops 😭
snowseau created a list
We Love You, Count von Count
We know Count von Count from Sesame Street loves numbers, so here are some books with numbers in the titles to show our appreciation for him!
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snowseau TBR'd a book

Spellbound
Georgia Leighton
snowseau TBR'd a book

Idolfire
Grace Curtis
snowseau TBR'd a book

One Day in December
Josie Silver
snowseau TBR'd a book

Crazy Rich Asians (Crazy Rich Asians, #1)
Kevin Kwan
Post from the Nine-Tenths forum
"The only people who actually live here are retired artists, folks who work in customer service, or exhausted teenagers manning tourist attractions by Niagara Falls."
Shhhhh, Frey, it may be true, but you didn't need to say it 😭
snowseau commented on a post
snowseau is interested in reading...

The Mystery of the Bitten Peach
Cecilia Tan
Post from the Nine-Tenths forum
That entire conversation with Colin's family made me so angry. It was remarkably close to the kind of stuff I hear at home all the time that just ends up making me feel like shit. I don't know what it is about mothers to make them always try to "fix" things to how they want it.
snowseau started reading...

Nine-Tenths
J.M. Frey
snowseau TBR'd a book

The Endangered Species Road Trip A Summer's Worth of Dingy Motels, Poison Oak, Ravenous Insects, and the Rarest Species in North America
Cameron MacDonald
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Hello beautiful people ! I recently realised that my younger sister read books that, in my eyes, are wayyyy too explicit for a 13 years old (ie Not in love by Ali Hazelwood). I have no control over what she reads but do you have romance recommendations that are more teen friendly ? I am also curious about when people encounter spicy books because for for me 16 to 18 would be a better age to start.
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
I’m just genuinely curious about readers reading reviews. So I have a three part question.
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Hi! Recently while scrolling on here I saw a discussion about average star reviews and people trying to read more intentionally to boost their average star reviews and it just got me thinking. My average star review has pretty much always been 4+ because I know what I like to read and very rarely read anything below a 3 star and if I do, I usually DNF anyways. I am most definitely very liberal with my star ratings and a book doesn’t have to be life changing in my eyes to get a high review but I still don’t give a high review to just anything.
I guess my question is how do people end up with such low average ratings? What are your requirements for each star tier on a review? If you are very strict with your reviews, what makes you want to keep reading a ”bad” book?
snowseau is interested in reading...

A Murder Most Camp
Nicolas DiDomizio
snowseau is interested in reading...

Bone of My Bone (Deluxe Edition)
Johanna van Veen